Gold Price History · XAU/USD · 2007–2026
20 Years Gold Price History Chart
Twenty years of gold data covers the entire post-9/11 era. It shows gold's behaviour through the GFC, the long ZIRP period, the pandemic, and the return of inflation. This is the canonical 'inflation hedge' chart.
Start (2007)
$725.00
Latest (2026)
$4,722.80
Period High
$5,593.90
Period Low
$560.80
Returns Summary
Total return
+551.42%
over 20 years
Annualised (CAGR)
+9.82%
compound annual growth
Per gram (today)
$151.84
Per tola: $1,771.08
Why a 20 years view matters
Long-term inflation hedge — When financial advisors discuss gold as an inflation hedge, this is roughly the data they reference. Gold's annualised return over this period typically beats CPI by a meaningful margin.
Best for
Investors building inflation-resistant portfolios for the long term.
Main drivers in this window
- Multi-decade USD weakness (with periodic strong-dollar phases)
- Two major financial crises — the GFC and the COVID shock
- Return of inflation after a 20-year dormant period
- Multi-year central-bank gold accumulation cycle
- Emerging-market wealth growth, particularly in India and China
Major Events Affecting Gold (2007–2026)
Year
2008
Global Financial Crisis
Lehman collapse triggers flight to safety. Gold breaks $1,000/oz. QE programs begin, devaluing fiat currencies.
Year
2011
European Debt Crisis Peak
Gold reaches $1,920/oz nominal high. EU sovereign debt fears, US debt-ceiling crisis, S&P downgrade of US credit.
Year
2013
Taper Tantrum & Bear Market
Fed signals end of QE. Gold sells off ~28% in 2013, beginning a multi-year correction to ~$1,050/oz by late 2015.
Year
2018
US-China Trade War
Tariffs and currency wars revive safe-haven demand. Gold begins gradual climb back above $1,300.
Year
2019
Fed Pivot
Fed cuts rates after tightening cycle. Gold breaks above $1,500 in summer 2019, ending a 6-year base.
Year
2020
COVID-19 Pandemic
Massive monetary and fiscal stimulus. Gold sets new all-time high above $2,070/oz in August 2020.
Year
2022
Russia–Ukraine War
Geopolitical crisis, surging inflation, central bank gold buying spree. Gold initially spikes then consolidates as rates rise.
Year
2023
BRICS De-dollarisation
Record central bank gold purchases (over 1,000 tonnes/year). Gold breaks $2,000 sustainably.
Year
2024
New All-Time Highs
Gold rallies past $2,500/oz on rate-cut expectations, persistent geopolitical risk, and China retail demand.
Year
2025
Above $3,000/oz
Gold continues record run as central banks, ETFs, and Asian retail investors all bid simultaneously. New ATHs throughout the year.
How to read this chart
The chart above shows the international XAU/USD spot price — the same benchmark used by every major bullion dealer, central bank, and ETF issuer worldwide. It's quoted in US dollars per troy ounce (1 oz = 31.1035 grams).
- Notice the cyclical nature of gold — long bull runs are followed by multi-year corrections, then new bull markets.
- The compound annual growth rate (CAGR) is more meaningful than total return for comparison with other assets.
- Major peaks (1980, 2011, 2020, 2024) tend to coincide with monetary stress and inflation fears.
- Major lows (1999, 2015) tend to coincide with strong USD periods and rising real interest rates.
- Gold's role in a portfolio is best evaluated on this scale — short-term volatility matters less than long-term wealth preservation.
- Compare the chart's compound return to your country's CPI inflation over the same period for a real (inflation-adjusted) view.
Frequently asked questions
What was gold's price 20 years ago?
20 years ago (around 2007), gold was trading near $725.00 per troy ounce on the international XAU/USD market. The chart on this page tracks the price evolution from then until today.
How much has gold returned over the last 20 years?
Over the last 20 years, gold's XAU/USD spot price has changed by +551.42% in total — equivalent to an annualised return (CAGR) of +9.82% per year. Note this is the international USD price; local-currency returns depend on your home currency's exchange rate against the dollar.
Is gold a good investment over 20 years?
Over a 20 years horizon, gold has reliably outpaced cash and most government bonds in inflation-adjusted terms. It's commonly held as 5–10% of a diversified portfolio for inflation hedging and tail-risk protection. Returns vary by start date but generally beat CPI.
What's the difference between gold's USD price and my local price?
Gold trades globally in US dollars per troy ounce (XAU/USD). The price you see at a local jeweller is calculated as: (XAU/USD spot price) × (your local currency / USD exchange rate) ÷ 31.1035 grams per ounce, then adjusted for taxes (VAT/GST), import duty, and making charges. So when your local currency weakens against the dollar, gold becomes more expensive in your currency — even if the USD price stays flat.
Why does gold move when interest rates change?
Gold pays no yield, so it competes with cash and bonds. When real interest rates (nominal rate minus inflation) rise, holding gold becomes relatively more expensive — money market funds and Treasury bills look more attractive. When real rates fall (or go negative), gold benefits because the 'opportunity cost' of holding it shrinks. This is why gold tends to rally when the Fed cuts rates or signals dovishness.
How does this chart compare to the S&P 500?
Over a 20 years horizon, both gold and the S&P 500 have generated positive real returns, but with very different risk profiles. Gold's drawdowns tend to occur at different times than equity drawdowns — that's the diversification benefit. Past performance varies; refer to a side-by-side chart from your broker for the exact comparison.
Should I buy gold now based on this chart?
This page shows historical data, not investment advice. Gold's price is influenced by many factors (rates, inflation, geopolitics, currency moves) that no single chart captures. Most financial advisors recommend dollar-cost averaging into any position rather than trying to time the entry. If you're looking at a specific date you might want to buy, our 'Best Time to Buy Gold' analysis page covers seasonal patterns.
What major events affected gold prices over the last 20 years?
The last 20 years (roughly 2007–2026) included multiple major events affecting gold: Global Financial Crisis (2008), European Debt Crisis Peak (2011), Taper Tantrum & Bear Market (2013), US-China Trade War (2018), Fed Pivot (2019). See the 'Major Events' section above for details.
Other Timeframes
View gold price history over a different time horizon:
Interactive Chart
Full XAU/USD chart with custom date range
Best Time to Buy
Seasonal patterns & buying calendar
Live Gold Rates
Real-time prices for 100+ countries
Gold Calculators
Tola, gram, karat purity & polish
Country Comparison
Compare gold prices across markets
Gold Guide
Karats, fineness & weight units
Key takeaways from 20 years of gold price history
Looking at gold over a 20 years window, the international XAU/USD spot price has gained +551.42% in total — equivalent to a compound annual growth rate of +9.82%. That's the global benchmark price; your local-currency return depends on how your home currency has moved against the US dollar over the same period.
Gold's role in a portfolio is fundamentally different from stocks or bonds. It produces no yield, no dividends, no earnings — its value comes from being scarce, durable, and outside any single government's monetary control. Over multi-year periods like this one, gold tends to act as insurance against three specific risks: currency debasement (when central banks print money to fund deficits), geopolitical instability (when capital flees to neutral safe havens), and real-rate compression (when inflation outpaces the yields available on cash and bonds).
Most modern portfolio theory recommends holding 5–10% of investable assets in gold, rebalanced periodically. The exact percentage depends on your age, risk tolerance, and home country's monetary stability — investors in countries with weaker currencies often hold meaningfully more, while investors with strong-currency exposure hold less. Use the chart and stats above to decide whether the current price represents a good entry, a fair-value zone, or an extended top.
For a deeper interactive chart with custom date ranges, see the full historical analysis page. To see what gold costs in your country today, check live rates here. If you're planning a purchase and want to find the best time of year, read our seasonal-patterns guide.
Disclaimer: This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Historical performance is not indicative of future results. Always consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions. Gold prices shown are international XAU/USD spot price; local prices may differ due to currency, taxes and dealer premiums.